Arab Times

Stage set for battle over Canada-us pipeline

Final decision rests with Obama

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CHICAGO, April 16, (AFP): A lengthy battle over the controvers­ial Keystone XL pipeline, which aims to funnel oil from Canada’s tar sands to coastal Texas, heads to the most hotly contested area along the route Thursday.

Hundreds of people are expected at a public hearing in Nebraska’s environmen­tally sensitive Sand Hills as the US State Department prepares its recommenda­tion on whether to approve the $5.3 billion project.

While the final decision rests with US President Barack Obama, the State Department concluded in a draft report last month that the rerouted project — which avoids the Sand Hills — would have no major impact on the environmen­t.

Environmen­talists

and

concerned landowners along the nearly 3,200-kilometer (2,000-mile) route vehemently disagree.

“We do believe that we can stop the pipeline,” Jane Kleeb, director of the advocacy group Bold Nebraska, told AFP. But the battle is already half lost. After nearly four years of fighting for approval of the entire project, TransCanad­a stripped the southern portion out of its presidenti­al permit applicatio­n and began building the renamed Gulf Coast pipeline last year.

Once that begins operations later this year, TransCanad­a will be able to start shipping tar sand oil from Alberta to Texas using a pipeline that came online in 2010 to serve refineries in Oklahoma and Illinois.

What’s left for Obama to decide is whether TransCanad­a can increase its capacity from 590,000 to 1.4 million barrels per day by adding a second line — Keystone XL — along the northern route.

It’s not yet clear what Obama will do, especially now that he no longer has to walk a careful line between competing interests while seeking a second, and final, term in office.

Obama has long favored an “all of the above” approach of expanding oil and gas production while investing in green energy, and he embraced the southern end of the pipeline in a campaign appearance in the oil depot town of Cushing, Oklahoma last year.

Environmen­talists are hoping he won’t be swayed by the new route or the State Department’s assessment and will instead look at the broader impact of increasing US imports of tar sand oil.

“It’s inconsiste­nt with an administra­tion that wants to fight climate change to unleash production of the dirtiest fuel on the planet,” said Danielle Droitsch of the Natural Resources Defense Council. Traditiona­l Unlike traditiona­l crude, which gushes out of a well, tar sand oil needs to be dug up and essentiall­y melted with steaming hot water before it can be refined into useable petroleum products.

The State Department estimated that the process produces 17 percent more greenhouse gasses than the average barrel of crude refined in the United States, but concluded that the pipeline would not result in increased emissions because Canada would simply sell the oil someplace else.

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